By Dr.Shery Delfani
Spain’s Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez issued a stark warning: “U.S. hegemony over European decision-making must be broken before we all burn.” This is not hyperbole but a clarion call for Europe to assert its independence or face catastrophic consequences tied to Washington’s increasingly reckless foreign policy. The escalating Iran-Israel conflict, teetering on the edge of a regional war, exemplifies the dangers of Europe’s subservience to U.S. priorities, particularly in the Middle East. By aligning too closely with Washington, Europe risks being dragged into crises it neither controls nor benefits from, exposing its political vulnerabilities and jeopardling a fire that could engulf the continent.
The Iran-Israel conflict is a glaring case study in Europe’s perilous deference to U.S. policy. Washington’s unwavering support for Israel has led to military escalation over diplomacy, even as Iran mobilizes regional proxies like Hezbollah and the Houthis, raising the specter of a broader war. Europe, despite its geographic proximity and economic exposure to the fallout, remains a bystander, tethered to U.S. priorities with little room to maneuver. This dynamic is not new. The EU’s failure to salvage the 2015 Iran nuclear deal after the Trump administration’s unilateral withdrawal laid bare its lack of autonomy. Mechanisms like INSTEX, designed to bypass U.S. sanctions and maintain trade with Iran, crumbled under American pressure, revealing Europe’s inability to act independently. Today, as tensions flare once more, this passivity risks repeating past mistakes with far higher stakes.
The consequences of Europe’s alignment with Washington are already mounting. Attacks on Red Sea shipping threaten vital energy routes, and a wider conflict involving Iran could choke oil transit through the Strait of Hormuz, sending global prices soaring and destabilizing European economies. Southern European nations, already strained, brace for renewed refugee flows from conflict zones in Gaza and Lebanon, while intelligence agencies warn of rising radicalization at home, fueled by perceptions of European complicity in Israel’s actions. These are not abstract risks but tangible threats to Europe’s stability, security, and economic well-being. Yet the EU remains fractured and ineffective. While Spain, Ireland, and Belgium have condemned Israel’s military actions and called for a ceasefire, others, like Germany, cling tightly to Washington’s line. This division paralyzes Europe’s ability to act as a coherent diplomatic force, reducing it to a geopolitical spectator rather than a player.
French President Emmanuel Macron has long championed “strategic autonomy,” the idea that Europe should make foreign policy decisions independently of the U.S. But without concrete action, this concept remains an empty slogan. If Europe aspires to be a true geopolitical actor, it must break free from Washington’s orbit and prioritize its own interests. This requires bold, pragmatic steps: pursuing diplomacy with Iran, even when it conflicts with U.S. preferences for confrontation, to stabilize the region and safeguard European energy and security interests; upholding international humanitarian law by holding all parties—including Israel—accountable for violations, signaling a commitment to principle over politics; and recognizing Palestinian statehood, as proposed by several European governments, to rebuild credibility in the Middle East and counter perceptions of bias. These actions do not entail abandoning NATO or adopting an anti-American stance but reflect a clear-eyed recognition that Europe’s interests—economic stability, energy security, and peace—do not always align with Washington’s agenda.
Europe’s acquiescence in past U.S.-led misadventures, from Iraq to Libya, offers a sobering lesson. Those conflicts brought instability, refugee crises, and terrorism to Europe’s doorstep, yet the continent failed to chart its own course. Today, the stakes are even higher. A wider Middle East war would not remain confined to the region—it would disrupt global energy markets, destabilize European economies, fuel political polarization, and invite violence within Europe’s borders. The Spanish Prime Minister’s warning underscores the urgency of this moment. Europe faces a critical choice: remain a passive follower in a dangerous game dictated by Washington or emerge as a sovereign actor with its own voice, values, and vision for peace. The clock is ticking, and the flames of conflict are creeping closer. If Europe does not act decisively, it risks burning alongside the crises it failed to prevent.
INPS Japan/London Post
Original URL: https://londonpost.news/europe-needs-strategic-distance-not-blind-u-s-alignment/